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E. De Biasi

Bio: E. De Biasi is an academic researcher from National Scientific and Technical Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic nanoparticles & Magnetization. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1156 citations. Previous affiliations of E. De Biasi include National University of Cuyo & Balseiro Institute.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview on magnetic of nanostructured magnetic materials is presented, with particular emphasis on the basic features displayed by granular nanomagnetic solids.
Abstract: An overview on magnetic of nanostructured magnetic materials is presented, with particular emphasis on the basic features displayed by granular nanomagnetic solids. Besides a review of the basic concepts and experimental techniques, the role of structural disorder (mainly the distribution of grain sizes), interparticle magnetic interactions and surface effects are also discussed with some detail. Recent results, models and trends on the area are also discussed.

449 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present magnetization measurements on 3-nm ferromagnetic amorphous nanoparticles and show evidence of the surface contribution to the magnetic properties in the $M(H),$M(T) and relaxation measurements.
Abstract: We present magnetization measurements on \ensuremath{\sim}3-nm $({\mathrm{Fe}}_{0.26}{\mathrm{Ni}}_{0.74}{)}_{50}{\mathrm{B}}_{50}$ ferromagnetic amorphous nanoparticles. Our results show evidence of the surface contribution to the magnetic properties in the $M(H),$ $M(T)$ and relaxation measurements. We observe a large increase in the magnetization with decreasing temperature, a nonsaturated component in the $M(H)$ curves, the presence of two maxima in the zero-field-cooling $M(T)$ data, and two viscosity regimes in magnetization relaxation data. The results have been interpreted by a simple model where we consider each single-domain particle as a core plus shell system with a uniaxial anisotropy acting on the core and a surface anisotropy acting on the shell. Monte Carlo simulations based in this core-shell model qualitatively reproduce all the observed phenomena.

130 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the results of the Smit and Beljers formalism and the usual linear model, where the effective anisotropy field, HAeff, in the superparamagnetic regime is considered as a perturbation to the Zeeman interaction and added to the applied field, H. While the difference between these approaches is negligible for small HAeff (high temperature regime), it becomes more pronounced when HAeff≈H.

84 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the role of agglomeration and magnetic interparticle interactions in heat generation of magnetic ferrofluids in an ac magnetic field is still unclear, with apparent discrepancy between the results presented in the literature.
Abstract: The role of agglomeration and magnetic interparticle interactions in heat generation of magnetic ferrofluids in an ac magnetic field is still unclear, with apparent discrepancy between the results presented in the literature. In this work, we measured the heat generating capability of agglomerated ferrite nanoparticles in a non-invasive ac magnetic field with f = 100 kHz and H0 = 13 kA m −1 . The nanoparticles were morphologically and magnetically characterized, and the specific absorption rate (SAR) for our ac magnetic field presents a clear dependence on the diameter of the nanoparticles, with a maximum SAR = 48 Wg −1 for 15 nm. Our agglomerated nanoparticles have large hydrodynamic diameters, thus the mechanical relaxation can be neglected as a heat generation mechanism. Therefore, we present a model that simulates the SAR dependence of the agglomerated samples on the diameter of the nanoparticles based on the hysteresis losses that is valid for the non-linear region (with H0 comparable to the anisotropy field). Our model takes into account the magnetic interactions among the nanoparticles in the agglomerate. For comparison, we also measured the SAR of non-agglomerated nanoparticles in a similar diameter range, in which N´ eel and Brown relaxations dominate the heat generation. (Some figures may appear in colour only in the online journal)

71 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the results of magnetization measurements on ∼3nm amorphous (Co 0.25 Ni 0.75 ) 65 B 35 nanoparticles, in a diluted dispersion (4% in a polymer) and in a powder form, are reported.

62 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The phenomenology of exchange bias and related effects in nanostructures is reviewed in this paper, where the main applications of exchange biased nanostructure are summarized and the implications of the nanometer dimensions on some of the existing exchange bias theories are briefly discussed.

1,721 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Chemistries that Facilitate Nanotechnology Kim E. Sapsford,† W. Russ Algar, Lorenzo Berti, Kelly Boeneman Gemmill,‡ Brendan J. Casey,† Eunkeu Oh, Michael H. Stewart, and Igor L. Medintz .
Abstract: Chemistries that Facilitate Nanotechnology Kim E. Sapsford,† W. Russ Algar, Lorenzo Berti, Kelly Boeneman Gemmill,‡ Brendan J. Casey,† Eunkeu Oh, Michael H. Stewart, and Igor L. Medintz*,‡ †Division of Biology, Department of Chemistry and Materials Science, Office of Science and Engineering Laboratories, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland 20993, United States ‡Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering Code 6900 and Division of Optical Sciences Code 5611, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. 20375, United States College of Science, George Mason University, 4400 University Drive, Fairfax, Virginia 22030, United States Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, University of California, Davis, School of Medicine, Sacramento, California 95817, United States Sotera Defense Solutions, Crofton, Maryland 21114, United States

1,169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The principal objective of this review is to summarize the present knowledge on the use, advances, advantages and weaknesses of a large number of experimental techniques that are available for the characterization of nanoparticles.
Abstract: Nanostructures have attracted huge interest as a rapidly growing class of materials for many applications. Several techniques have been used to characterize the size, crystal structure, elemental composition and a variety of other physical properties of nanoparticles. In several cases, there are physical properties that can be evaluated by more than one technique. Different strengths and limitations of each technique complicate the choice of the most suitable method, while often a combinatorial characterization approach is needed. In addition, given that the significance of nanoparticles in basic research and applications is constantly increasing, it is necessary that researchers from separate fields overcome the challenges in the reproducible and reliable characterization of nanomaterials, after their synthesis and further process (e.g. annealing) stages. The principal objective of this review is to summarize the present knowledge on the use, advances, advantages and weaknesses of a large number of experimental techniques that are available for the characterization of nanoparticles. Different characterization techniques are classified according to the concept/group of the technique used, the information they can provide, or the materials that they are destined for. We describe the main characteristics of the techniques and their operation principles and we give various examples of their use, presenting them in a comparative mode, when possible, in relation to the property studied in each case.

910 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The magnetic properties of nanoparticles which are directly related to their applications in biomedicine are discussed, mainly on surface effects and ferrite nanoparticles, and on one diagnostic application of magnetic nanoparticles as magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents.
Abstract: Due to finite size effects, such as the high surface-to-volume ratio and different crystal structures, magnetic nanoparticles are found to exhibit interesting and considerably different magnetic properties than those found in their corresponding bulk materials. These nanoparticles can be synthesized in several ways (e.g., chemical and physical) with controllable sizes enabling their comparison to biological organisms from cells (10–100 μm), viruses, genes, down to proteins (3–50 nm). The optimization of the nanoparticles’ size, size distribution, agglomeration, coating, and shapes along with their unique magnetic properties prompted the application of nanoparticles of this type in diverse fields. Biomedicine is one of these fields where intensive research is currently being conducted. In this review, we will discuss the magnetic properties of nanoparticles which are directly related to their applications in biomedicine. We will focus mainly on surface effects and ferrite nanoparticles, and on one diagnostic application of magnetic nanoparticles as magnetic resonance imaging contrast agents.

829 citations

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TL;DR: A matrix of parameters that can be varied to tune the magnetic properties of nanoparticles is outlined, focusing on the effect of size, shape, composition, and shell-core structure on saturation magnetization, coercivity, blocking temperature, and relaxation time.
Abstract: The tremendous interest in magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) is reflected in published research that ranges from novel methods of synthesis of unique nanoparticle shapes and composite structures to a large number of MNP characterization techniques, and finally to their use in many biomedical and nanotechnology-based applications. The knowledge gained from this vast body of research can be made more useful if we organize the associated results to correlate key magnetic properties with the parameters that influence them. Tuning these properties of MNPs will allow us to tailor nanoparticles for specific applications, thus increasing their effectiveness. The complex magnetic behavior exhibited by MNPs is governed by many factors; these factors can either improve or adversely affect the desired magnetic properties. In this report, we have outlined a matrix of parameters that can be varied to tune the magnetic properties of nanoparticles. For practical utility, this review focuses on the effect of size, shape, composition, and shell-core structure on saturation magnetization, coercivity, blocking temperature, and relaxation time.

606 citations